After electricity was mostly restored on Tuesday, there was still some isolated interruption, and the reason of the massive outages in Spain and Portugal was still unknown.
On Monday, one of the worst blackouts in Europe knocked down ATMs throughout the Iberian Peninsula, halted aircraft, stopped rail systems, and interfered with cell connections.
Red Eléctrica, the power operator, said that the Spanish electrical system was operating regularly by 11 a.m. on Tuesday. All 6.4 million consumers now have electricity again, according to Portuguese grid operator REN.
Authorities in Spain had not yet offered a further reason for the five-second loss of 15 gigawatts, or 60% of the country’s total demand, as life started to return to normal.
In order to ensure that a similar incident “never takes place again,” Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez stated on Tuesday that the government’s top objectives were repairing Spain’s electrical grid and identifying the reasons behind the blackout.
Deaths are investigated
Authorities were looking into five deaths that could have been connected to the blackout, including three deaths involving the same family, according to Spanish news agency EFE.
According to EFE, a lady in Valencia passed away following issues with an oxygen supply equipment, three relatives perished in Galicia from potential carbon monoxide inhalation from a generator, and a third died in a candle-caused fire in Madrid.
Sabotage ruled out
Prior to Monday’s blackout, Spain’s power operator’s head of services for system operations, Eduardo Prieto, saw two abrupt, consecutive “disconnection events.” He informed reporters that further research was required.
No “unusual meteorological or atmospheric phenomena” were found, according to Spain’s meteorological office AEMET, and its weather stations did not record any abrupt temperature changes.
According to Portugal’s National Cybersecurity Center, there was no indication that a hack was the cause of the outage. Additionally, European Commission executive vice president Teresa Ribera disregarded sabotage.
Return to travel and tennis
After 22 matches were postponed due to the darkness, the Madrid Open tennis event resumed. Iga Swiatek, rated second, advanced to the quarterfinals on Tuesday, part of a busy program.
On Tuesday, throngs of passengers queued to board trains or rebook trips at Spain’s biggest rail stations. Hundreds waited for information beside displays at the Atocha station in Madrid. Numerous others had slept at the station, covered with Red Cross blankets.
The metro system in Madrid was completely operational again by Tuesday at 11 a.m. Although the system was functioning correctly in Barcelona, Rodalies Catalunya, the company that operates the service, stated on X that certain commuter trains were still halted in the afternoon due to “electrical instability.”
Mid-distance and commuter trains were still either halted or operating at reduced capacity in various regions of Spain.
Spanish emergency personnel said that they had evacuated some 35,000 people who were stuck on trains and underground on Monday. Transit networks were particularly affected by the blackout, which resulted in the conversion of airports, train stations, and sports facilities into temporary shelters.
Despite being stuck on a commuter train outside of Madrid, Rubén Carión managed to open a window and make his way to the closest stop. Later, he stayed overnight at Atocha station with a companion.
Dozing off on the ground The 24-year-old summed up his experience in two words: “pure chaos.” He was “hungry, thirsty, and tired.”
The suspect in the explosion of a reproductive clinic in Palm Springs, California, was described by officials on Sunday as a 25-year-old man with “nihilistic ideations” who was killed in the blast while trying to live-stream it.
According to investigators at a news conference, Guy Edward Bartkus of Twentynine Palms, northeast of Palm Springs, was discovered dead close to the car that detonated outside an American Reproductive Centers clinic on Saturday. Whether the suspect intended to die was not disclosed by officials.
The explosion sparked concerns about whether it was carried out to impede the clinic’s services, which include in vitro fertilization, egg freezing, and LGBTQ+ family building. Officials claimed it likely caused “the largest bombing scene” in Southern California. According to the clinic, the explosion did not damage any of the eggs, embryos, or other items in the lab. Four additional people who were hurt in the explosion on Saturday have been discharged from the hospital.
Officials once more referred to the attack as “an intentional act of terrorism” on Sunday. Authorities stated that the FBI was looking into a screed believed to have been authored by the suspect, although they did not clearly reveal a motivation.
“The IVF facility was the target of this targeted attack,” stated Akil Davis, assistant director of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office.
Additionally, investigators are aware of a 30-minute audio tape that went viral online following the bombing and featured a guy explaining his plot to assault an IVF facility.
The speaker and the American Reproductive Centers facility were not specifically named in the tape or on the website where it was released. However, according to a law enforcement person with knowledge of the case who was not permitted to comment publicly, both were being looked at as part of the FBI’s ongoing inquiry into Bartkus’s motivations and what they called his “anti-natalist” beliefs. The philosophical view known as anti-natalism holds that since life inherently entails suffering, creating new life is morally repugnant.
The speaker on the recording laments a number of issues in his private life and asserts that a person’s “right to die” should not be restricted by the government.
In essence, I oppose life. Furthermore, the individual on the audio stated that IVF is “sort of the epitome of pro-life ideology.”
The accompanying website, which domain data showed was created in February, makes reference to a variety of fringe movements, such as negative utilitarianism, which holds that people should aim to minimize suffering rather than maximize pleasure in the world, and pro-mortalism, which holds that it is best for people to die as soon as possible in order to minimize suffering.
“The ultimate objective is for the truth to prevail,” the author stated. When it happens, we can start the process of ridding this planet of the illness that kills life.
In vitro fertilization, a reproductive assistance procedure that has become more controversial since the Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade in 2022, has gained attention again as a result of Saturday’s explosion. Antiabortion organizations that seek to safeguard the embryos produced during the procedure, which they contend ought to be legally regarded as human beings, have criticized the procedure. Tens of thousands of individuals nationwide depend on IVF, the most popular type of assisted reproduction, in order to conceive.
The Trump administration denounced the attack on Saturday.
Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on X that “violence against a fertility clinic is unforgivable” and that “the Trump administration understands that women and mothers are the heartbeat of America.”
In order to ensure that no embryos were destroyed, FBI Director Kash Patel praised the prompt action taken by federal authorities, local law enforcement, and firefighters in the wake of the blast.
In the parking area close to the fertility clinic, a car that police recognized as a 2010 silver Ford Fusion sedan exploded at approximately 11 a.m. on Saturday. Firefighters put out the majority of the explosion’s flames, but they had to retreat because the facility had “structural collapsed.” Local residences and businesses were evacuated.
Roads were shut down shortly after as authorities examined the explosion’s debris, which spread more than 250 yards beyond the fertility clinic in all directions.
“There is evidence everywhere,” Davis remarked.
About an hour away, in Twentynine Palms, officials also carried out a search warrant, which Davis verified was connected to the suspect’s inquiry.
The attack on the clinic was denounced by Barbara Collura, president of Resolve, a national infertility advocacy group, who stated that the patients and medical staff engaged in family-building “deserve to receive and provide care in peace and safety.”
“Going through the IVF process and experiencing infertility are difficult experiences for anyone to go through,” Collura said in a statement on Saturday. “It is crucial that people who require access to IVF medical care, regardless of where they reside, can do so without fear.”
Maher Abdallah, the physician at the Palm Springs fertility clinic, posted a message on the establishment’s Facebook page on Saturday to reassure the public that his staff and all of the reproductive materials used there were safe.
He promised that by Monday morning, the clinic would be fully operational once more.
Abdallah wrote, “This moment has shaken us—but it has not stopped us.”
Pope Leo XIV offers a message of love and togetherness in inaugural Mass in St. Peter’s Square
Pope Leo XIV offered a message of love and unity during an inaugural Mass on Sunday in St. Peter’s Square before an estimated 200,000 pilgrims, presidents, patriarchs and kings.
A woman waves a United States flag ahead of Pope Leo XIV’s official inauguration of his pontificate with a Mass in St. Peter’s Square attended by heads of state, royalty and ordinary faithful, Sunday, May 18, 2025. (Updatix Photo/Andrew Medichini)
President Trump has received the recognition and respect he has long sought at every stop of his hectic tour.
Adulation and the absence of protests made the Gulf a dream destination for Trump.
Business leaders in Saudi Arabia gave him a standing ovation when he declared that sanctions on Syria will be lifted.
He returned from Qatar with a vow to invest billions of dollars in U.S. goods and services.
He received the highest civilian distinction in the United Arab Emirates.
A week on the Arabian Peninsula yielded nothing but victories for President Trump, who has been plagued at home by criticism of his tariff policies, demonstrations against his immigration crackdown, and ethical concerns.
As he was departing a palace in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, where he had just been honored, Mr. Trump remarked on Thursday, “The last four days have been really amazing.” “Probably going back to Washington, D.C., tomorrow,” he continued with a regretful expression.
“The respect shown to our country was incredible,” the president said on Air Force One on Friday, reflecting on his trip. That is not how anyone is handled. No one has ever been treated that wonderfully.
The honor and respect that Mr. Trump has long sought were accorded to him at every stage of his hectic Middle East journey. fighter jet escorts. extravagant ceremonies to welcome guests. Lavender and red carpeting. Arabian equines. dazzling chandeliers. Camels. Dancers with swords. Palaces of white marble. An image of the American flag illuminated the Burj Khalifa, the tallest structure in the world, in the United Arab Emirates. In his honor, of course.
“As someone who works in construction, I see flawless marble. At one point, Mr. Trump praised the royal court in Doha, the capital of Qatar, saying, “This is what they call perfecto.” “Those camels are appreciated. It’s been a while since I’ve seen camels like that.
In most other parts of the world, where governments, particularly those closest to the United States, are in shock over Mr. Trump’s strong tariffs and bellicose statements toward Canada, Greenland, and Panama, such a welcome would have been improbable.
However, Mr. Trump’s every action was applauded throughout the gulf.
Mr. Trump was able to declare that the United States and the three countries he visited—Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates—had made more than $2 trillion in economic investments. All three countries have been longtime buyers of American military hardware.
According to Mr. Trump, the three countries might invest up to $4 trillion, which is about the same amount as all of their sovereign wealth funds put together. The leaders of the Gulf nations were more than glad to provide Mr. Trump the staggering numbers, even though a large portion of that amount consists of long-term promises that might or might not be fulfilled and includes some agreements that were already in progress.
Mr. Trump was given a tour of current agreements between American and Emirati businesses, including acquisitions of G.E. engines and Boeing aircraft, at a business gathering in Abu Dhabi on Friday.
Mr. Trump was astounded by his guests’ riches, which allows them to pay in full for whatever transactions they make.
Editors’ Selections
She is now married and wrote about “The 36 Questions That Lead to Love.”
The Robot is performed by Darren Criss.
How to Transform Leftovers into a Feast “‘Subject to financing’ is not what they say,” Mr. Trump stated. “They’re not having any issues.”
At every stage of the journey, Mr. Trump surrounded himself with welcoming crowds and frequently transformed his events into campaign rallies, such as a visit to Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base, the biggest American military installation in the Middle East. He would blast his favorite playlists, including “Gloria,” disparage Democrats, and make false claims that he had won the 2020 election.
“U.S.A.” chants welcomed him as he addressed American troops as their commander in chief.
“Are you sure we won three elections? A fourth is what some people want us to do. I’m not sure. Mr. Trump again hinted at the possibility of an unconstitutional third term in office when he told the troops, “I’ll have to think about it.” The hat that says “Trump 2028” is the sexiest. The left is going crazy over us.
By drawing attention to transactions with private companies unrelated to Mr. Trump’s own business interests, the Gulf leaders helped Mr. Trump escape problems over his family’s commercial activities in the area. The $400 million luxury jet that Mr. Trump is requesting as a gift from Qatar was not presented, the Trump Organization’s agreement with a Saudi real estate company to construct a residential high-rise in Jeddah was not visited, and the Abu Dhabi-backed fund that is completing a $2 billion business deal using the Trump firm’s digital coins was not promoted.
When questioned by reporters on Air Force One, Mr. Trump denied being aware of the cryptocurrency deal.
He declared, “I really don’t know anything about it.” “But let me tell you, I’m a huge crypto fan.”
Republicans would have erupted in outrage and ordered congressional investigations if a Democratic president had done what Mr. Trump has done: applaud a former jihadist, welcome Qatar’s ties with Iran, and accept a $400 million airplane as a “gift.” Rather, what happened was largely an awkward silence.
Several Trump supporters, like Missouri Senator Josh Hawley and far-right activist Laura Loomer, expressed their disapproval of the plane gift but twisted their words to avoid upsetting Mr. Trump. Mr. Hawley steered clear of the suggestion of corruption by stating that he would prefer “if Air Force One were a big, beautiful jet made in the United States of America — that would be ideal.” Ms. Loomer began her attack by stating that she would “take a bullet” for the president.
Many people applauded Mr. Trump’s announcement that the US was changing its Middle East policy from one of condemnation and conflict to one of peace and prosperity.
At a meeting of Saudi monarchy and business leaders in Riyadh, Mr. Trump stated, “It’s important for the world to note that this great transformation has not come from Western interventionists or flying people in beautiful planes, giving you lectures on how to live and how to govern your own affairs.”
Both Republicans and Democrats in the US agreed with Mr. Trump’s declaration that he was lifting sanctions on Syria in an attempt to provide the war-torn nation a new beginning.
In a joint statement, Senate Foreign Relations Committee leaders Jim Risch, a Republican from Idaho, and Jeanne Shaheen, a Democrat from New Hampshire, stated, “We applaud President Trump’s decision to lift all sanctions on Syria.”
According to Andrew Leber, an assistant professor at Tulane University in Louisiana who studies the relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia, the trip was meant to bring about a number of diplomatic, economic, and public relations victories for the participating nations.
Saudi Arabia has the chance to draw attention to how its economy and society are evolving and to position itself as a global leader in terms of both business and diplomacy. According to Mr. Leber, Mr. Trump had a trip that practically could not go wrong.
Mr. Leber continued, “This was the one location that is certain to give him a very enthusiastic, warm, and tightly controlled welcome.” There would be demonstrations if he traveled anywhere in Latin America. There would be protests if he traveled anywhere in Europe. There won’t be any domestic demonstrations at all, and this is a place that will talk to him and deal with him on very transactional terms while putting on a huge show.
As Gulf officials embraced Mr. Trump’s preferred expressions, that was in fact the case. Every country discussed their trade imbalances with the US and how they purchase more goods from the US than they export, which is one of the president’s favorite topics.
Playing on Mr. Trump’s campaign slogan, panelists at a business summit in Saudi Arabia discussed “making aviation great again.”
Mr. Trump entered a huge rotunda at the Friday meeting in Abu Dhabi, where five enormous displays displayed different types of investments, beginning with “Making Energy Great Again.” He received a box with an oil drop within there as a present.
The emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, borrowed Mr. Trump’s energy motto, “Drill, baby, drill,” while he was in Doha.
Before addressing Mr. Trump, the emir stated, “The United States and Qatar are feeding and fueling the world.” “I’m glad to see you again.”
Gulf leaders are also relieved that Mr. Trump is the president of the United States, as he seeks lucrative partnerships while ignoring their human rights histories.
Global security analyst Jon B. Alterman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington stated that “governments and publics throughout the gulf like Trump a lot.”
“They believe that Western liberals wish to disgrace them for their domestic problems, ranging from the mistreatment of migrant workers to the rights of the LGBT community,” Mr. Alterman continued. Although there are undoubtedly more leftist voices in the Gulf, Trump is viewed by the majority as a leader who shares their values and common sense.
Speaking to the media as he concluded his trip in Abu Dhabi on Friday, Mr. Trump expressed concern that the person who succeeds him as president will be given credit for the agreements once they are completed.
He declared, “I’ll be sitting at home, and I’ll say, ‘I did that,’ and who the hell knows where I’ll be.” The credit for this will be taken by someone. “This guy did it,” he continued, pointing to himself. “You remember, press.”